The mirror is a complex structure. We have to look inside, and when we do, we face ourselves. Maybe we see something we don't want. The globalists, the traitors to the country, the people promoting Bolshevik ideas hate him by the thousands...

Mirrors were banned in Szeged. László Botka and his globalists do not want to look into it at any cost and with their paternal protective hand they also prevent young people who have not even heard of the then 2006 Gyurcsány terror from accidentally looking into the mirror of the exhibition showing them and the 2006 terror. of bloody days. They don't know about the police attacking the citizens like a pack of rabid dogs on the peacefully commemorating crowd, the rampage of the "law enforcement" event without identification markings, beating women, men, the elderly and young people bloody, the shot eyes, the manhunts in Budapest, the torture and humiliation, the uniformed about conceptual judgments made on an assembly line based on his lies.

Comrade Botka, that mirror, the "Freedom drowned in blood" exhibition shows this image again and again. Embarrassing? Shameful? Disgusting what they did? Please, I would have liked to govern successfully instead of terror and not lie in the morning, night and evening, and of course at other times of the day as well. Comrade Botka, you too can see yourself in that mirror, if not with a rubber stick or viper in your hand, but among the unscrupulous supporters of the terrorist leader, Gyurcsány. You know well what Mihály Babits put into lines of verse: Among criminals, he is an accomplice who is silent. You also remained silent, not even grimacing to reveal that you would condemn the perpetrators and the commander of the blood bath. This blood also stained your hands.

I understand why he didn't want to let into his fiefdom the exhibition, which will expose your eyes to the unforgivable and unforgettable crimes. Who wants to see their (and theirs') shameful deeds again?

You are very democrats, you are constantly whining about the "Orbán dictatorship", but if such a thing existed, you would not have been mayor long ago and would not have been able to ban an exhibition from your city. You are the vanguards of freedom of conscience and speech, but your conscience was not visible and still is not visible today in connection with the terrorist attack of October 23, 2006. True, they could draw strength from the way the "democrats" of the European Union reacted - or rather did not react - to the bloody events, i.e. they hid like...in the grass.

We still have the great background, it's called the LIBE committee. The globalist gang that can perfectly know Péter Bacsó's film "The Witness" and the scene: " Comrade Virág, this is not the confession, this is the verdict" . They came here to investigate the "rule of law", with the pre-written verdict in their bag, but at least those who were asked about it were very well selected. After all, only anti-government organizations can form an objective opinion...

Speaking of form. They did not even care to maintain the appearance of impartiality. Not only by choosing the Orbán-hating Anna Donáth into the camp of "investigators" (I don't even understand why we let them in here, when it was possible to know in advance what their purpose was), but also by rejecting the invitation of the Civil Solidarity Forum: let them also look at the reminders of the Gyurcsány terror. Or, to be precise, they didn't even refuse, they simply didn't respond to the invitation. Because they are so objective that they don't let themselves be influenced by little things like reality.

Comrade Botka thought that he could see this as a signal, behind him is the European mainstream, and in front of him is this jerk, down-to-earth company, which has the nerve to mention the "peaceful police dispersal" even after 15 years.

Share people, there's nothing to see here! And maybe it won't happen, because Botka's comrades might also ban the October 23 commemorations...

Where is the dictatorship these days? In the friendly city of Szeged.

(Cover photo: László Botka. Photo: Origo)